Scott O'Neil

Scott O'Neil
• Age: 35 (turns 36 on March 23)
• Title: Senior vice president, marketing and team
business operations
• League: NBA
• Education: B.S., marketing, Villanova University,
1992; MBA, Harvard Business School, 1998
• Family: Wife, Lisa; daughters Alexa, 6, and Kira, 2
• Career: Corporate
marketing manager for the New Jersey Nets from 1992-1994; joined the
Philadelphia Eagles in 1994 as director of corporate sales; rejoined the Eagles
after business school as vice president of sales in May 1998; president of
HoopsTV from 1999-2001; joined the NBA in 2001 as vice president of business
consulting; named to current position in 2004.
• Last vacation: Snowmobiling in Utah
• Last book read: "The Five Dysfunctions of a Team: A
Leadership Fable" by Patrick Lencioni
• Last movie seen: "The Constant Gardener"
• Pet peeve: Focusing on excuses, not results
• Greatest disappointment: Going broke with
HoopsTV
• Fantasy job: A product tester for Spalding
• Business advice: Work for a company you love, a boss you
respect and people who you'd have over for dinner.

As NBA senior vice president of marketing and team
business operations, Scott O'Neil helped the NBA last year set an all-time
average attendance mark.

So what can O'Neil do for an encore?

"We're on track to break last year's record," O'Neil said.

The league's average game
attendance is up about 2 percent from last year's record-setting mark of
17,314, and the league has reversed the downward trend of season-ticket sales.

O'Neil recognizes that it's the league's star power that
ultimately sells tickets. Hardcourt stars aside, though, O'Neil and his
department play a pivotal role in getting teams to boost their ticket and
sponsorship revenue. It's his job to help teams in their sales efforts and get
them to share vital sales secrets in an effort to develop "best practices" that
in the end benefit all 30 teams.

"What is sustaining the [ticket-sales] momentum is that we
have teams that are open and enjoy sharing information and they believe in the
best practices," O'Neil said. "Our teams are competitive on the court, but off
the court, they are striving to improve business overall. If there is an idea
that works in Phoenix, three days later it can end up working for everyone
else."

The strong ticket sales point to O'Neil's success at helping
teams build their fan bases, but the recent exodus of executives working for
him who have migrated to high-level team positions speaks loudly to the
league's talent pool. Three members of O'Neil's staff have moved to team jobs
in the past year — Paul Mott, who is now president of the Hornets; Lou DePaoli,
chief marketing officer for the Hawks; and Tom Glick, chief marketing officer
of the Nets.

"[O'Neil] brings his professionalism with the team experience
and he has an absolute thirst for knowledge in the area," said NBA Commissioner
David Stern. "He has an extraordinary set of relationships with the teams, and
they have absolute confidence in what he is telling them."

O'Neil and his department spent the past year concentrating
on ticket and sponsorship sales. That focus has now shifted toward boosting
luxury-suite and premium-seating revenues.

"We put a lot of work into
early season-ticket renewal and more sophisticated database marketing, and it's
contributed to the increase in full season-tickets sales," O'Neil said,
declining to disclose the specific percentage of increase. "We've gotten much
deeper into sponsorship development so teams can see where there is
opportunity. We're doing the same things with premium seating, and I've taken
on the CRM [customer relationship management] role to try to help build
databases and market to those people."

Though O'Neil has been able to point to the attendance record
as a sign of strength, he feels the pressure of continuing to deliver.

"The greatest issue in selling is how do we retain the
season-ticket base and how do we keep growing," he said. "The world is changing
so fast, how do we stay ahead with our business practices and how do we run our
business at its optimum pace?"